How the Rio 2016 Olympics logo was created

Daniel Souza, creative manager at Tatil, reveals how the Brazilian agency developed the visual identity for Rio 2016.

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There's only a few days to go until the Olympics kick off in Rio, but the team at Tatil have had the games in mind for a lot longer. They created the logo design and identity package for Rio 2016; here creative manager Daniel Souza reveals some of the secrets behind their work.

"Developing the visual identity for Rio 2016 was a unique project, and meant so much to me as a Brazilian. For our initial bid, we invested everything in a very intense journey, with only one month between briefing and delivery.

"We began by trying to understand the brand essence and how to translate it for a worldwide audience. Using our strategic tool, BranDirection, we came up with a 12-point checklist, setting out the parameters of our brand. Then two teams, from our Rio and São Paulo offices, met by video-conference each week to share ideas, concepts, roughs and designs.

"The design selected to represent Tatil in the bid was the one that got a majority vote among office staff. We'd designed it to represent the encounter of the Olympic spirit with the Carioca soul ('Carioca' is a term used to refer to anything related to the city of Rio de Janeiro). Born with three-dimensional DNA from the very first sketches, it stands for the warmth and welcoming spirit of our people, who are ready to celebrate the Olympic Games. The core symbol shows people joining hands, while the colour scheme reflects Rio's environment: yellow for the sun, blue for the sea, and green for the forests.

Tatil also designed the identity for Rio's paralympic games

"The logo took a little longer In the early stages, we tried several different typefaces to match our symbol. But we finally realised that no prêt-à-porter type would carry the same DNA we had created, so we invited a type designer to help us develop the logo with the same characteristics that shaped our symbol. It took over another month to give this set of seven characters the right personality.

"Before the design was revealed to the world, we had to face a pretty scary NDA. During this time we were working in a small room in the office with no windows, no internet and no phones. No mobiles were allowed inside and access was restricted by a fingerprint lock.

"Our Olympic branding was finally revealed on New Year's Eve 2010, five-and-a-half years ahead of the Olympic Games. There was still lots to be developed and made over the following years though – it needed to still remain relevant, right up until Games time."